Large Scale Research Projects

The Human Brain Project is a H2020 FET Flagship Project which strives to accelerate the fields of neuroscience, computing and brain-related medicine.
This acceleration will be achieved by a strategic alignment of scientific research programs in fundamental neuroscience, advanced simulation and multi-scale modelling with the construction of an enabling Research Infrastructure.
More: Human Brain Project …

Sacha van Albada, together with Timo Dickscheid (INM-1) and Claus Hilgetag (UMC Hamburg-Eppendorf), received a DFG grant in the priority program "Computational Connectomics" to develop a model of human visual cortex. In the project, layer- and area-specific neuron densities in human cortex will be measured and used to help predict cortical connectivity, and the resulting model will be simulated to investigate relationships between structure and dynamics.
More: SPP 2041 Computational Connectomics …

The SMHB project aims for a realistic organ model as a fundamental tool for basic research and (pre-)clinical studies of the human brain and large populations of cell. Key elements are the analysis of the organization of the human brain across multiple scales as well as its modeling and simulation.
More: SMHB - Supercomputing and Modeling for the Human Brain …

Previous Collaborative Large Scale Research Activities

BrainScaleS was an EU FET-Proactive FP7 funded research project. The project started on 1 January 2011 and ended in 2015. It was a collaboration of 19 research groups from 10 European countries. The BrainScaleS project aimed at understanding function and interaction of multiple spatial and temporal scales in brain information processing.

With the transnational funding initiative "German - Japanese Collaborations in Computational Neuroscience", the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) support German-Japanese collaborative projects in Computational Neuroscience.

Aim of the Clinical Research Group 219 was the characterisation of pathological basal ganglia-cortex interactions in different neurological and psychiatric diseases and their therapeutic modulation by deep brain stimulation and pharmacological interventions. We were heading two subprojects.